Genome assemblies provide a powerful basis of comparative multi-omics analyses that offer insight into parasite pathogenicity, host-parasite interactions, and invasion biology. As a unique intracellular nematode, Trichinella consists of two clades, encapsulated and nonencapsulated. Genomic correlation of the distinct differences between the two clades is still unclear. Here, we report an annotated draft reference genome of non-encapsulated Trichinella, T. pseudospiralis, and perform comparative multi-omics analyses with encapsulated T. spiralis. Genome and methylome analyses indicate that, during Trichinella evolution, the two clades of Trichinella exhibit differential expansion and methylation of parasitism-related multicopy gene families, especially for the DNase II members of the phospholipase D superfamily and Glutathione S-transferases.
More...Genome assemblies provide a powerful basis of comparative multi-omics analyses that offer insight into parasite pathogenicity, host-parasite interactions, and invasion biology. As a unique intracellular nematode, Trichinella consists of two clades, encapsulated and nonencapsulated. Genomic correlation of the distinct differences between the two clades is still unclear. Here, we report an annotated draft reference genome of non-encapsulated Trichinella, T. pseudospiralis, and perform comparative multi-omics analyses with encapsulated T. spiralis. Genome and methylome analyses indicate that, during Trichinella evolution, the two clades of Trichinella exhibit differential expansion and methylation of parasitism-related multicopy gene families, especially for the DNase II members of the phospholipase D superfamily and Glutathione S-transferases. Further, methylome and transcriptome analyses revealed divergent key excretory/secretory (E/S) genes between the two clades. Among these key E/S genes, TP12446 is significantly more expressed across three life stages in T. pseudospiralis. Overexpression of TP12446 in the mouse C2C12 skeletal muscle cell line could induce inhibition of myotube formation and differentiation, further indicating its key role in parasitism of T. pseudospiralis. This multi-omics study provides a foundation for further elucidation of the mechanism of nurse cell formation and immunoevasion, as well as the identification of pharmacological and diagnostic targets of trichinellosis.
Less...Accession | PRJNA451013 |
Type | Umbrella project |
Publications | - Published online: Liu X et al., "Comparative multi-omics analyses reveal differential expression of key genes relevant for parasitism between non-encapsulated and encapsulated Trichinella", Communications Biology, 2021;4(1)
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Submission | Registration date: 19-Apr-2018 Agricultural Genomics Institute at Shenzhen |
Project Data:
Resource Name | Number of Links |
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Sequence data |
Nucleotide (WGS master) | 1 |
SRA Experiments | 6 |
Publications |
PubMed | 1 |
PMC | 1 |
Other datasets |
BioSample | 7 |
GEO DataSets | 1 |
Assembly | 1 |
This project encompasses the following 2 sub-projects:
Project Type | Number of Projects |
Genome sequencingHighest level of assembly : Scaffolds | 1
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BioProject accession | Assembly level | Organism | Title |
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PRJNA449263 | Scaffolds | Trichinella pseudospiralis | Comparative multi-omics analyses reveal differential expression of key genes relevant for parasitism between non-encapsulated and encapsulated Trichinella (Agricultural Genomics Institute...) |
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Other | 1 |
BioProject accession | Organism | Title |
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PRJNA450330 | Trichinella pseudospiralis | Comparative multi-omic analyses of Trichinella Pseudospiralis based on a new genome assembly by long-read sequencing (Agricultural Genomes Institute...) |
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